Title: Organization Change and Innovation
1Chapter 7
- Organization Change and Innovation
2Learning Objectives
- After tonight, you should be able to
- Describe the nature of organization change,
including the forces for change and planned
versus reactive change. - Discuss the steps in organization change and how
to manage resistance to change. - Identify and describe major areas of organization
change and discuss the assumptions, techniques,
and effectiveness of organization development. - Describe the innovation process, forms of
innovation, the failure to innovate, and how
organizations can promote innovation.
3Outline
- The Nature of Organization Change
- Forces for Change
- Planned Versus Reactive Change
- Managing Change in Organizations
- Steps in the Change Process
- Understanding Resistance to Change
- Overcoming Resistance to Change
- Areas of Organization Change
- Changing Organization Structure and Design
- Changing Technology and Operations
- Changing People, Attitudes, and Behaviors
- Changing Business Processes
- Organization Development
4Outline (contd)
- Organizational Innovation
- The Innovation Process
- Forms of Innovation
- The Failure to Innovate
- Promoting Innovation in Organizations
5The Nature ofOrganization Change
- Organization Change
- Any substantive modification to some part of the
organization (e.g., work schedules, machinery,
employees). - Forces for Change
- External forces in the organizations general and
task environments force the organization to alter
the way in which it competes. - Internal forces inside the organization cause it
to change its structure and strategy some
internal forces are responses to external
pressures.
6The Nature ofOrganization Change (contd)
- Planned Change
- Change that is designed and implemented in an
orderly and timely fashion in anticipation of
future events. - Reactive Change
- Change that is a piecemeal response to events and
circumstances as they develop.
7Managing Change in Organizations
- Steps in the Change Process (Kurt Lewins Model)
- Unfreezing
- Individuals must be shown why the change is
necessary. - Implementing change
- The change itself is implemented.
- Refreezing
- Involves reinforcing and supporting the change so
thatit becomes a integral part ofthe system.
8Steps inthe Change Process
9Understanding Resistance to Change
- People resist change because of
- Uncertainty about the extent and effects of
change. - Threats to self-interests, power, and influence.
- Different perceptions of change effects and
outcomes. - Feelings of loss in disrupted social networks,
power, security, and familiarity with existing
procedures.
10Understanding Resistanceto Change (contd)
- Overcoming Resistance to Change
- Encourage active participation in the change
process. - Provide education and communication about the
change process. - Facilitate the change process by making only
necessary changes, announcing changes in advance,
and allowing time to adapt to change. - Use force-field analysis to focus efforts on
removing barriers to change.
11Force-Field Analysis for Plant Closing at General
Motors
12Reengineering in Organizations
- Business Process Change (Reengineering)
- The radical redesign of all aspects of a business
to achieve major improvements in cost, service,
or time. - The Need for Business Process Change
- Entropy is a normal process leading to system
decline. - Results from maintenance of the status quo
- Puts the organization out of synch with its
environment - Starts the organization to consuming its own
resources
13Reengineering in Organizations (contd)
- Approaches to Business Process Change
- Recognizing the need for change and acting on it
with a sense of urgency. - Starting with a clean slate helps open up the
process. - Using a blend of top-down and bottom-up
involvement.
14The Reengineering Process
15Organization Development (OD) (contd)
- OD Assumptions
- Employees desire to grow and develop.
- Employees have a strong need to be accepted by
others within the organization. - Individuals will influence the organization and
the organization will influence the attitudes,
perceptions, behaviors, and expectations of
individuals.
16The Innovation Process
InnovationThe managed effort of an organization
to develop new products or services or new uses
for existing products or services
17Forms of Innovation
- Radical Innovation
- A new product, service, or technology
developedby an organization that completely
replaces theexisting one. - Radical innovation fundamentally changes the
nature of competition in an industry. - Incremental Innovation
- A new product, service, or technology that
modifies an existing one. - Incremental innovation does not significantly
affect competition in an industry.
18Forms of OrganizationalInnovation (contd)
- Technical Versus Managerial Innovations
- Technical innovation
- A change in the physical appearance or
performance of a product or service, or of the
physical processes through which a product or
service is manufactured. - Managerial innovation
- A change in the management process by which
products and services are conceived, built, and
delivered to customers.
19Forms of OrganizationalInnovation (contd)
- Product Versus Process Innovations
- Product innovation
- A change in the physical characteristics or
performance of existing products or service or
the creation of brand-new products or services. - Process innovation
- A change in the way a product or service is
manufactured, created, or distributed.
20 Innovation
- Reasons for Failing to Innovate
- Lack of resources
- Failure to recognize opportunities
- Resistance to change
- Promoting Innovations in Organizations
- Using the reward system
- Having a supportive culture
- Encouraging intrapreneurship
- Inventors
- Production champions
- Sponsors